Saturday, 27 December 2008

FENG SHUI AND MR LEE SENIOR




Singapore is a bustling metropolitan. A wealthy, progressive nation first under the stewardship of Lee senior and now his son is at the helm. The few places I went to while I was there, I could not help but pick up the fact that Singaporeans have somehow or other incorporated some form of feng shui beliefs in their everyday living. Could it be because of the influence of Mr Lee senior who is widely known for his belief in Feng Shui? Most probably, yes.
Here is an article about how the first prime minister of Singapore used Feng Shui for the good of his nation.
Singapore is another city that has had phenomenal financial growth. Its good fortune has been attributed to the persistent practice of Feng Shui by Singapore's Prime Minister, Lee Kuan Yew. When building the Mass Transit Railroad systems in the eighties, the construction caused a decline in the economy. During a Feng Shui consultation, Mr. Lee was told that Singapore's fortune could be improved by hanging up a Ba Gua, the eight-sided Feng Shui symbol. Since the government was not sold on the placement of such a Chinese symbol, Mr. Lee instead introduced a Ba Gua-shaped one dollar coin. When the economy still did not recover, he created road tax disks in the shape of the Ba Gua and the economy immediately improved. (And consequently, every car in Singapore began hanging this symbol in their windshield.)
Years later, Mr. Lee was told that a dragon placed looking over the mouth of Singapore River and the Merlion, Singapore's symbol, would ensure Singapore's good fortune. So on the top left-hand corner of the country's fifty dollar bill, Mr. Lee placed a scene of the Singapore River, harbor, and Merlion. In this way the dragon would be forever symbolically poised above the Merlion, thereby safeguarding its prosperity forever.

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